Like I said in the other thread before it got seriously derailed, I have a lot to learn on this issue, so I'll be watching this thread.

One of my coworkers last year was nonbinary, only used "they" pronouns instead of he/she pronouns, it was quite an educational experience.

I wish the English language had a natural gender-neutral pronoun. It was so difficult to keep referring to that coworker as "they" in the singular. I would mess up often, it didn't feel right to not use it in the plural.

Does anyone know of any other options for gender-neutral pronouns? (Maybe this will help keep this thread on-track)

Mostly people who are very uneducated or older, which leads it a strange connotation in my mind. No one I associate with ever uses "they" this way, so it makes it feel strange to me. Whereas a new pronoun wouldn't have existing associations.

So if I mean to say "Dexter is on the way, so make room for Dexter at the table." It would be "they are on the way, make room for them at the table."

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Well yeah, but that's using it as a plural. Sort of like the Royal We. And honestly I find that sounds less difficult to use without associating what you're saying with poor grammar. People already use "they are coming" for a single person, as you said, even though it's not grammatically correct.

But "they is coming" has a different connotation, at least in general American English.

Mostly people who are very uneducated or older, which leads it a strange connotation in my mind. No one I associate with ever uses "they" this way, so it makes it feel strange to me. Whereas a new pronoun wouldn't have existing associations.

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Yeah, that's what outdated education does to you (not specifically you)! It's the current preference in many English departments around the country, and it's in journalism style guides as well. It's easier than introducing a new pronoun and about connotations, well, it's also probably easier to get rid of classist prejudices.

This is great dialogue. Even though the members here may differ a bit by a generation, can't we agree that most of us were raised to be 'difference blind'? I was born into a time hyper focused on intergration, which I feel robbed many of us of a natural curiosity why differences exist.
The gender equality issue is actually a hot button topic in the pagan community. Yes, even among the folks considered so open mined. We often say 'don't be so open minded your brain falls out'. But to quote one of my most admired authors and teachers " How do we humans balance inclusion and diversity without turning into a homogeneous melting pot or actively practicing discrimination? If I believe that the cosmosphere needs diversity, how do we foster a healthy diversity, rather than a divergence that tears us apart?"

It's really going to be a matter of not educating people to assign meaning to gender labels, which also involves completely abolishing 'traditional' gender stereotypes. Back in the days when homosexuality was less socially accepted than it is now, the label 'homosexual' was basically code for deviant and the stereotype assigned to all homosexual men, for example, was that they were all rampant promiscuous sexual perverts and homosexual women were all butch ball breakers. Society has come a long way in this regard but not for transgender people who still suffer the label of "freak".

That is slowly changing though and things like having a character like Sophia on such a big hit like OITNB is doing great things to dispel the "freak" label which us just so dehumanising. If we didn't have to suffer social conservatism which labels anyone who is in any way out of the box as abominations of god then the process of social acceptance would be so much quicker.

Mostly people who are very uneducated or older, which leads it a strange connotation in my mind. No one I associate with ever uses "they" this way, so it makes it feel strange to me. Whereas a new pronoun wouldn't have existing associations.

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Interestingly, I have this problem at work all the time since I deal with a LOT of Indians, Chinese, and other Asian nationalities for whom -- not seeing them -- and just getting a name, I am unsure which gender to refer to.

The singular "they" was named Word of the Year recently. It's also totally fine, grammatically speaking. I love nerding out over grammar but I don't think my pedantry should trump anyone's right to identify the way they do.

I guess my follow-up question now that we've sorted out the pronoun thing is... How, then, do nonbinary people deal with things that require them to choose male or female? I'm sure there are many examples, but the one that comes to mind most readily is restrooms.

Obviously a trans man or woman is going to choose the restroom assigned to their gender, but what does a nonbinary person do? And furthermore, how can society reconcile this issue? Is the answer that there should be no gender labels on bathrooms at all, or something else?

And on a further complicated note... I listened to I believe an episode of Radiolab earlier this year about a person who considered themselves (yay, I Englished!) both male and female. But it was an unusual situation (hence the interview) because they said rather than feeling in the middle of a scale of gender, they would switch between being entirely male and entirely female. This happened during the interview itself. And they're not two separate personalities or anything... His or her gender switched without warning.

Radiolab presented this as an unusual case that psychologists weren't sure about. Is this actually a rare thing or no?

My native language is English and I've used they/them as gender neutral pronouns for years, usually in conjunction with "one." One can easily use they to describe themselves while remaining singular.

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Yeah, as I said, English sucks. The French use "on" constantly for both singular (one) and plural (we), but we've got nothing quite equivalent. That would certainly help. It also conjugates the exact same as "il" or "elle", which is not the same for the English "they". Stupid English.

The singular "they" was named Word of the Year recently. It's also totally fine, grammatically speaking. I love nerding out over grammar but I don't think my pedantry should trump anyone's right to identify the way they do.

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Right, but as mentioned, I wasn't trying to nitpick the grammar of it for its own pedantic sake. Merely trying to clarify what was meant by "singular they". Just trying to sort out if it meant "they, but used with the singular verbs you'd use with he/she" OR "they, with the usual plural verbs but referring only to one person".